Miscellaneous News

Lethe

Captain
I'm probably just revealing my ignorance of all things Canadian here, but I was surprised to find India openly characterised as a "hostile nation" in
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piece from The Guardian regarding alleged and anticipated foreign interference in Canada's upcoming election. Obviously there have been significant stressors in the Canada-India relationship, but one would typically expect more qualified or circumspect language. Does this characterisation accurately reflect the broader Canadian attitudes towards India in political or media circles?
 
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vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
I'm probably just revealing my ignorance of all things Canadian here, but I was surprised to find India openly characterised as a "hostile nation" in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
piece from The Guardian regarding alleged and anticipated foreign interference in Canada's upcoming election. Obviously there have been significant stressors in the Canada-India relationship, but one would typically expect more qualified or circumspect language. Does this characterisation accurately reflect the broader Canadian attitudes towards India in political or media circles?
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Randomuser

Senior Member
Registered Member
【范志毅:“中国足球脸都不要了!”-哔哩哔哩】
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That's not even news, anyone with remote knowledge of China knows that soccer is China's 国运平衡器。
At least China can say we don't really care about football. Its just a nice to have.

Meanwhile the UK's entire life revolves around football. People don't kill themselves so they can watch the premier league every week.

And yet the UK has only won 1 (one) world cup which was in 1966. That world cup so conveniently was also when the UK was hosting it and the ball arguably didn't even go in the goal properly.
 

Randomuser

Senior Member
Registered Member
Speaking of India

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Exclusive: India's $23 bln plan to rival China factories to lapse after it disappoints​


NEW DELHI, March 24 (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has decided to let lapse a $23 billion program to incentivize domestic manufacturing, just four years after it launched the effort to woo firms away from China, according to four government officials.
The scheme will not be expanded beyond the 14 pilot sectors and production deadlines will not be extended despite requests from some participating firms, two of the officials said.

Some 750 companies, including Apple supplier Foxconn and Indian conglomerate Reliance Industries, signed up to the Production-Linked Initiative scheme, public records show.
Firms were promised cash payouts if they met individual production targets and deadlines. The hope was to raise the share of manufacturing in the economy to 25% by 2025.
Instead, many firms that participated in the program failed to kickstart production, while others that met manufacturing targets found India slow to pay out subsidies, according to government documents and correspondence seen by Reuters.

As of October 2024, participating firms had produced $151.93 billion worth of goods under the program, or 37% of the target that Delhi had set, according to an undated analysis of the program compiled by the commerce ministry. India had issued just $1.73 billion in incentives - or under 8% of the allocated funds, the document said.
News of the government's decision to not extend the plan and specifics about the lag in payouts are being reported by Reuters for the first time.
Modi's office and the commerce ministry, which oversees the program, did not respond to requests for comment. Since the plan's introduction, manufacturing's share of the economy has decreased from 15.4% to 14.3%.

In a separate statement on Saturday, the commerce ministry said participating firms had produced $163 billion worth of goods as of November 2024. The ministry did not say if the program would be allowed to expire but said PLIs have "incentivized domestic manufacturing, leading to increased production, job creation, and a boost in exports."
Foxconn, which now employs thousands of contract workers in India, and Reliance didn't return requests for comment.
Two of the government officials told Reuters the end of the program did not mean Delhi had abandoned its manufacturing ambitions and that alternatives were being planned.
The government
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the program's impact, particularly in pharmaceuticals and mobile-phone manufacturing, which have seen explosive growth. Some 94% of the nearly $620 million in incentives disbursed between April and October 2024 were directed to those two sectors.

In some instances, some food-sector companies that applied for subsidies weren't issued them due to factors such as "non compliance of investment thresholds" and companies "not achieving stipulated minimum growth," according to the analysis. The document did not provide specifics, though it found production in the sector had exceeded targets. Reuters could not determine which companies the analysis referred to.

But Delhi had previously
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and agreed to extend some deadlines and increase payment frequency after complaints from PLI participants. One of the Indian officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss confidential matters, said that excessive red tape and bureaucratic caution continued to stymie the scheme's effectiveness.
As an alternative, India is considering supporting certain sectors by partially reimbursing investments made to set up plants, which would allow firms to recover costs faster than having to wait for production and sale, another official said.
Trade expert Biswajit Dhar at the Delhi-based Council for Social Development think-tank, who has said Modi's government
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to attract foreign investment, said the country might have missed its moment.
The incentives program was "possibly the last chance we had to revive our manufacturing sector," he said. "If this kind of mega-scheme fails, do you have any expectation that anything is going to succeed?"
The stalling of manufacturing comes as India tries to circumvent the trade war unleashed by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has criticised Delhi's protectionist policies.
Trump's threat of reciprocal tariffs on countries like India that have a trade surplus with the U.S. means the export sector is increasingly challenged, said Dhar. "There was some amount of tariff protection ... and all that is going to be slashed."

HITS AND MISSES​

The program was introduced at an opportune time for India: China, which for decades had been the world's factory floor, was struggling to
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amid Beijing's zero-COVID policy.
The U.S. was also seeking to reduce its economic reliance on an increasingly assertive Beijing, prompting many multinationals to pursue a "China plus one" policy of diversifying production lines.
With its large youthful population, lower costs and a government regarded as relatively friendly to the West, India seemed set to benefit.
India has become a global leader in pharmaceutical and mobile-phone production in recent years.
The country produced $49 billion worth of mobiles in the 2023-24 fiscal year, up 63% from 2020-21, government data show. Industry leaders like Apple now manufacture their newest and most sophisticated cellphones in India, after having started with low-cost models.
Similarly, pharmaceutical exports nearly doubled to $27.85 billion in 2023-24 from a decade ago.
But the success was not repeated in the other sectors, which include steel, textiles and solar panel manufacturing. India faces fierce competition from cheaper rivals like China in many of those fields.
In the solar industry, for instance, eight of the 12 companies that signed up to PLI are unlikely to meet their targets, according to a December 2024 analysis of the sector prepared by the renewable energy ministry and seen by Reuters. The eight firms included units of Reliance, Adani Group and the Indian conglomerate JSW.
The analysis found that the Reliance entity would only meet 50% of the production target it had been set for the end of the 2027 fiscal year, when the solar PLI scheme will expire. It also said that the Adani business had not ordered equipment it needed to manufacture the solar panels and that JSW had not "done anything yet."
JSW declined to comment, while Adani did not respond to questions.
The commerce ministry said in a January letter to the renewables ministry seen by Reuters that it would not agree to its counterpart's request to extend the scheme beyond 2027 as doing so "will result in unfair benefit for non-performers."
The renewables ministry said in response to Reuters' questions that it was committed to "fairness and accountability," as well as "ensuring that only those who meet their targets are rewarded."
In the steel sector, investment and production also lag targets. Fourteen of the 58 projects approved for PLIs have been withdrawn or removed due to lack of progress, according to the undated program-wide analysis.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
What's the point of being ultra-rich if you can even run a govt, hah!
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How dare they question the very foundation of what makes the US. The whole reason why Americans want everything privatized especially in other countries is because they saw a future where they could buy their way into taking over other countries. They didn’t like socialism or communism because the state is the ultimate competitor they could not beat. Corporations operate like communism. There’s no democracy in how a corporation operates.

Look at Google and China. They wanted unrestricted access to China because at the time there were no domestic competitors. They would be in control and dominate in China where they would be able to kill any competition. What interfered with it? The state who had all the power. Look at how Apple is losing ground in China and the US talks as if domestic Chinese rivals are stealing what belongs to Apple.

And now that you have Chinese companies on an equal footing as their American counterparts, the US is all paranoid over Chinese companies taking over.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
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Total lie and absolute fraud. This “reprieve” will only last until the US government controls TikTok. Then they will attempt to strongarm China into selling anything else they deem an “national security threat” to American Imperalism.
Chinese have to be more greedy than any Americans hence why they think China has to sell. But so far it looks like no sort of negotiation is taking place because why would Trump be offering a reprieve? Just like it fries their circuits that DeepSeek is open source and is for free. China has to be plotting something because they ain't trying to scam the world out of their money like US AI companies wanted to do. Destroying the US landscape isn't monumental itself?
 

Randomuser

Senior Member
Registered Member
Speaking of India

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Exclusive: India's $23 bln plan to rival China factories to lapse after it disappoints​


NEW DELHI, March 24 (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has decided to let lapse a $23 billion program to incentivize domestic manufacturing, just four years after it launched the effort to woo firms away from China, according to four government officials.
The scheme will not be expanded beyond the 14 pilot sectors and production deadlines will not be extended despite requests from some participating firms, two of the officials said.

Some 750 companies, including Apple supplier Foxconn and Indian conglomerate Reliance Industries, signed up to the Production-Linked Initiative scheme, public records show.
Firms were promised cash payouts if they met individual production targets and deadlines. The hope was to raise the share of manufacturing in the economy to 25% by 2025.
Instead, many firms that participated in the program failed to kickstart production, while others that met manufacturing targets found India slow to pay out subsidies, according to government documents and correspondence seen by Reuters.

As of October 2024, participating firms had produced $151.93 billion worth of goods under the program, or 37% of the target that Delhi had set, according to an undated analysis of the program compiled by the commerce ministry. India had issued just $1.73 billion in incentives - or under 8% of the allocated funds, the document said.
News of the government's decision to not extend the plan and specifics about the lag in payouts are being reported by Reuters for the first time.
Modi's office and the commerce ministry, which oversees the program, did not respond to requests for comment. Since the plan's introduction, manufacturing's share of the economy has decreased from 15.4% to 14.3%.

In a separate statement on Saturday, the commerce ministry said participating firms had produced $163 billion worth of goods as of November 2024. The ministry did not say if the program would be allowed to expire but said PLIs have "incentivized domestic manufacturing, leading to increased production, job creation, and a boost in exports."
Foxconn, which now employs thousands of contract workers in India, and Reliance didn't return requests for comment.
Two of the government officials told Reuters the end of the program did not mean Delhi had abandoned its manufacturing ambitions and that alternatives were being planned.
The government
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
the program's impact, particularly in pharmaceuticals and mobile-phone manufacturing, which have seen explosive growth. Some 94% of the nearly $620 million in incentives disbursed between April and October 2024 were directed to those two sectors.

In some instances, some food-sector companies that applied for subsidies weren't issued them due to factors such as "non compliance of investment thresholds" and companies "not achieving stipulated minimum growth," according to the analysis. The document did not provide specifics, though it found production in the sector had exceeded targets. Reuters could not determine which companies the analysis referred to.

But Delhi had previously
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and agreed to extend some deadlines and increase payment frequency after complaints from PLI participants. One of the Indian officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss confidential matters, said that excessive red tape and bureaucratic caution continued to stymie the scheme's effectiveness.
As an alternative, India is considering supporting certain sectors by partially reimbursing investments made to set up plants, which would allow firms to recover costs faster than having to wait for production and sale, another official said.
Trade expert Biswajit Dhar at the Delhi-based Council for Social Development think-tank, who has said Modi's government
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
to attract foreign investment, said the country might have missed its moment.
The incentives program was "possibly the last chance we had to revive our manufacturing sector," he said. "If this kind of mega-scheme fails, do you have any expectation that anything is going to succeed?"
The stalling of manufacturing comes as India tries to circumvent the trade war unleashed by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has criticised Delhi's protectionist policies.
Trump's threat of reciprocal tariffs on countries like India that have a trade surplus with the U.S. means the export sector is increasingly challenged, said Dhar. "There was some amount of tariff protection ... and all that is going to be slashed."

HITS AND MISSES​

The program was introduced at an opportune time for India: China, which for decades had been the world's factory floor, was struggling to
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
amid Beijing's zero-COVID policy.
The U.S. was also seeking to reduce its economic reliance on an increasingly assertive Beijing, prompting many multinationals to pursue a "China plus one" policy of diversifying production lines.
With its large youthful population, lower costs and a government regarded as relatively friendly to the West, India seemed set to benefit.
India has become a global leader in pharmaceutical and mobile-phone production in recent years.
The country produced $49 billion worth of mobiles in the 2023-24 fiscal year, up 63% from 2020-21, government data show. Industry leaders like Apple now manufacture their newest and most sophisticated cellphones in India, after having started with low-cost models.
Similarly, pharmaceutical exports nearly doubled to $27.85 billion in 2023-24 from a decade ago.
But the success was not repeated in the other sectors, which include steel, textiles and solar panel manufacturing. India faces fierce competition from cheaper rivals like China in many of those fields.
In the solar industry, for instance, eight of the 12 companies that signed up to PLI are unlikely to meet their targets, according to a December 2024 analysis of the sector prepared by the renewable energy ministry and seen by Reuters. The eight firms included units of Reliance, Adani Group and the Indian conglomerate JSW.
The analysis found that the Reliance entity would only meet 50% of the production target it had been set for the end of the 2027 fiscal year, when the solar PLI scheme will expire. It also said that the Adani business had not ordered equipment it needed to manufacture the solar panels and that JSW had not "done anything yet."
JSW declined to comment, while Adani did not respond to questions.
The commerce ministry said in a January letter to the renewables ministry seen by Reuters that it would not agree to its counterpart's request to extend the scheme beyond 2027 as doing so "will result in unfair benefit for non-performers."
The renewables ministry said in response to Reuters' questions that it was committed to "fairness and accountability," as well as "ensuring that only those who meet their targets are rewarded."
In the steel sector, investment and production also lag targets. Fourteen of the 58 projects approved for PLIs have been withdrawn or removed due to lack of progress, according to the undated program-wide analysis.
Here's an interesting fact. Do you know what state in India has the most manufacturing?

Its supposedly Tamil Nadu which is the most southern part of India. They're also supposed to be the most nerdy part of since a lot of modern nerd accomplishments come from there.

So its pretty telling when the most nerdy place in India is also the one that does most manufacturing. Its shows even nerds there are still not afraid of getting actual physical work done there. So one has to ask, what exactly are the northerners doing if manufacturing is too low class for them?
 

Ringsword

Junior Member
Registered Member
At least China can say we don't really care about football. Its just a nice to have.

Meanwhile the UK's entire life revolves around football. People don't kill themselves so they can watch the premier league every week.

And yet the UK has only won 1 (one) world cup which was in 1966. That world cup so conveniently was also when the UK was hosting it and the ball arguably didn't even go in the goal properly.
I hope,dream,that China will win at football/soccer even World Cup to shut up these Euros(esp UK),South Americans etc-our enemies also have said that China was not athletic enough to win ANY olympic medals in any event-look at us now.We Chinese can achieve ANYTHING if we put our,minds and spirit and body into it-laugh now westoids-I have a feeling China will have the last and greatest laugh. :cool: :cool: :cool: :cool:
 

luminary

Senior Member
Registered Member
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Hopefully every shameful act will eventually come to light. People deserve the truth.
South Korea on Wednesday admitted for the first time that in its rush to send children to American and European homes decades ago, its adoption agencies committed widespread malpractices, including falsifying documents, to make them more adoptable.
The findings by South Korea’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, a government agency, which said children were sent away “like luggage” for profit decades ago, were a hard-won victory for South Korean adoptees abroad. Many adoptees have returned to their birth country in recent years, campaigning tirelessly for South Korea to come to terms with one of the most shameful legacies of its modern history.
Adoption agencies falsified documents to present babies as orphans when they had known parents, the commission acknowledged. When some babies died before they were flown overseas, other babies were sent in their names. The heads of four private adoption agencies were given the power to become legal guardians for the children, signing them away for overseas adoption.
 
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